Government policies and sex work realities

Government policies and sex work realities

Human trafficking in the regulated sex industry

Samenvatting

In the Netherlands selling sexual services for money is accepted by law under certain conditions. Some sex workers, however, are tricked out of their money by people using manipulation, fraud or coercion. This crime, the exploitation of sex workers, constitutes human trafficking.

Several government agencies deal with the prevention and prosecution of human trafficking in the sex industry, and with the protection of victims. However, people who are identified as victims often decline the assistance that is offered to them. How can this be explained? Does it mean that the way in which human trafficking is dealt with fails to meet the needs and problems of sex workers?

This dissertation explores these questions by zooming in on the red-light district in Amsterdam and reveals the relationships between pimps and sex workers, the informal economy and the criminal investigation of human trafficking. It shows that the perspective of sex workers on exploitation and on government policy is relevant for a better understanding of effective anti-trafficking policy.

Inhoudsopgave

General introduction

Between visibility and invisibility: sex workers and informal services in Amsterdam

Relationships between suspects and victims of human trafficking: exploitation of sex workers in Dutch trafficking cases and parallels to domestic violence

Human trafficking and criminal investigation strategies in the Amsterdam red-light district

Criminal investigation of human trafficking in the Netherlands

Sex work realities versus government policies: meanings of anti-trafficking initiatives for sex workers